Does Dan Walters, a columnist forĀ The Sacramento Bee, see that public school reform in California is a growth opportunity for wealthy private interests? Apparently not, as he conveys no sense that āSilicon Valley tycoonsā have such pecuniary motives when they donate to candidate Marshall Tuck vying to unseat Tom Torlakson, current California State Superintendent of Public Instructionzzzz:http://www.sacbee.com/2014/10/
We maintain software capitalists contribute to Tuckās 2014 campaign to increase corporate power in Californiaās public schools and to shape important curriculum decisions. Ours is no conspiracy theory.
We point to the owners of the hardware and software delivering Common Core State Standards (from David Colemanās firm Student Achievement Partners, composed, copyrighted and promoted in conjunction with the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers) and its testing predecessors to K-12 pupils in Calif. When Laurene Powell Jobs, philanthropist and widow of Steve Jobs, ponies up $500,000 to Tuckās campaign, this is an investment in the companyās bottom line of growing its education products and services.
Look no further than Appleās iPads with embedded instructional data from Pearson, Inc. (owner of Addison-Wesley, Allyn and Bacon, Benjamin Cummings, Longman, Prentice Hall, and Scott Foresman) the Los Angeles Unified School District bought for students. Pearson dubs itself āthe worldās leading learning company,ā earning $7 billion in education revenues for 2011, according to its 2012 annual report, as 84 percent of the firmās education revenues flow from student assessments and achievement tests.
There are 6.2 million public school K-12 students in the Golden State. The potential profits for campaign donors is big, indeed.
If we accept wrong assumptions about the Tuck v. Torlakson election for relative to the motives of software tycoons, our conclusions do not matter.
Duane CampbellĀ is a professor emeritus of bilingual multicultural education at California State University Sacramento, a union activist, and chair of Sacramento DSA.
Seth SandronskyĀ is a Sacramento journalist and member of the freelancers unit of the Pacific Media Workers Guild. Email[email protected]
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